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Dive into the research topics where Daniela Graziani is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniela Graziani.


Cancer | 1997

p53 protein accumulation and p53 gene mutation in esophageal carcinoma. A molecular and immunohistochemical study with clinicopathologic correlations.

Guido Coggi; Silvano Bosari; Massimo Roncalli; Daniela Graziani; Paola Bossi; Giuseppe Viale; Roberto Buffa; Stefano Ferrero; Mario Piazza; Stella Blandamura; Andrea Segalin; Luigi Bonavina; A. Peracchia

p53 gene mutation and p53 protein accumulation are common in human cancer. However, their clinical significance is controversial and p53 accumulation may not correlate with gene mutation. The current study investigates the occurrence of p53 alterations in esophageal carcinoma, the correlation between the analyses at the gene and protein level, and their prognostic significance.


Human Pathology | 1995

bcl-2 oncoprotein in colorectal hyperplastic polyps, adenomas, and adenocarcinomas

Silvano Bosari; Laura Moneghini; Daniela Graziani; Arthur K.C. Lee; John J. Murray; Guido Coggi; Giuseppe Viale

The bcl-2 gene is an oncogene that inhibits programmed cell death (apoptosis). We investigated by immunocytochemistry bcl-2 expression in normal colonic mucosa, hyperplastic polyps, adenomas, and adenocarcinomas of the large bowel. The purpose of the investigation was twofold; to assess the possible role of bcl-2 in colorectal tumorigenesis and to evaluate its clinical significance. The cases studied included 24 hyperplastic polyps, 49 adenomas, and 205 colorectal carcinomas. In both normal mucosa and hyperplastic polyps bcl-2 immunoreactivity was detected only in the proliferative cells of the colonic crypts. Conversely, bcl-2 immunoreactivity was noted in all adenomas irrespective of the degree of dysplastic change; it was diffuse in 84% of adenomas and focal in the remaining cases. In colorectal carcinomas bcl-2 expression was undetectable in 50% and focal (less than 50% immunostained neoplastic cells) in 38% of tumors. The remaining 12% of the carcinomas displayed diffuse (more than 50% immunostained neoplastic cells) bcl-2 immunoreactivity. In colorectal carcinomas bcl-2 expression was not correlated with relevant clinicopathologic parameters, including disease stage, tumor location and growth fraction, DNA ploidy, and p53 protein accumulation, and had no prognostic significance by univariate or multivariate analysis. These results suggest that bcl-2 oncoprotein may play a role in colorectal tumorigenesis, probably in the early phases of the adenoma-carcinoma sequence. bcl-2 expression in established tumors has no prognostic significance.


Diagnostic Molecular Pathology | 1995

Detection of p53 mutations by single-strand conformation polymorphisms (SSCP) gel electrophoresis. A comparative study of radioactive and nonradioactive silver-stained SSCP analysis.

Silvano Bosari; Antonio Marchetti; Fiamma Buttitta; Daniela Graziani; Giorgio Borsani; Massimo Loda; Generoso Bevilacqua; Guido Coggi

p53 mutations are the most common genetic abnormality in human tumors, but their clinical significance remains to he precisely elucidated. Conventional single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis, a well-established technique for detecting p53 mutations, uses radioactively labeled polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products, which migrate abnormally in the presence of mutations. We performed radioactive PCR-SSCP analysis in a series of 30 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded ovarian carcinomas and two cell lines (SW480 and Caov4) harboring known homozygous p53 mutations and compared the results with nonradioactive silver-stained SSCP. The purpose was to assess whether nonradioactive SSCP is suitable for detecting p53 mutations in a rapid, sensitive, cost-effective fashion, without the need of radioactive isotopes. We accomplished PCR amplification of p53 exons 5 through 8 in 26 carcinomas, and radioactive SSCP detected p53 mutations in 13 tumors: three mutations were localized in exon 5, six in exon 6, two in exon 7, and two in exon 8. All mutations were correctly identified with nonradioactive SSCP, except for one exon 8 mutation. To establish the sensitivity of nonradioactive SSCP, DNA samples of SW480 and Caov4 were mixed with increasing amounts (0–90%) of normal DNA and subjected to PCR-SSCP analysis. Mutations were detected until the concentration of SW480 and Caov4 was 15% and 10% respectively, of the total sample. The results of our investigation demonstrate that nonradioactive silver-stained SSCP is a sensitive, rapid, and simple technique to detect p53 mutations, even in formalin-fixed tissues, and could be easily used to investigate large series of patients to assess the clinical significance of p53 mutations in human tumors.


Laboratory Investigation | 2001

Molecular Alterations of Barrett's Esophagus on Microdissected Endoscopic Biopsies

Solange Romagnoli; Massimo Roncalli; Daniela Graziani; Barbara Cassani; Elena Roz; Luigi Bonavina; A. Peracchia; Silvano Bosari; Guido Coggi

Alterations in proto-oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes play a role in the sequence from Barrett’s metaplasia to esophageal adenocarcinoma. The present study aims to ascertain whether molecular abnormalities take place in Barrett’s metaplasia and low-grade dysplasia and to correlate them with the histological features of the esophageal mucosa. Forty-one formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded endoscopic esophageal biopsies were classified according to the type of metaplastic changes (noncolumnar fundic and cardial metaplasia; columnar metaplasia, with and without intestinal features). After microdissection samples were examined for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) using polymorphic markers on 5q (D5S82), corresponding to APC (adenomatous polyposis coli) gene, 13q (CA repeat in intron 2 position 14815 to 14998 of the retinoblastoma gene), 17p (D17S513) corresponding to p53 locus, and for p53 mutations. Molecular alterations including LOH, allelic imbalance, and microsatellite instability could be detected in all types of metaplastic changes and sporadically in the squamous epithelium adjacent to the metaplastic tissue. Molecular alterations involving microsatellites D5S82 and the CA repeat inside the retinoblastoma gene were more frequent in nonintestinal metaplasia whereas those involving the p53 locus took place in columnar intestinal metaplasia and in low-grade dysplasia. Clonal changes were demonstrated in different metaplastic areas in three patients. Genetic alterations comprising LOH and microsatellite instability characterize Barrett’s mucosa and appear related to the type of metaplastic change. Some of them precede the development of intestinal metaplasia, suggesting that genetic alterations take place earlier than previously thought.


Human Pathology | 1998

Integrin laminin receptor profile of pulmonary squamous cell and adenocarcinomas

Carlo Patriarca; Rosa Maria Alfano; Arnoud Sonnenberg; Daniela Graziani; Barbara Cassani; Annemieke A. de Melker; Piergiuseppe Colombo; Lucia R. Languino; Mara Fornaro; William H. Warren; Guido Coggi; Victor E. Gould

The differential expression of laminin receptors has been shown to modulate the invasive capability of malignant cells. We have investigated the reactivity of human pulmonary squamous carcinomas (SSC, n = 20) and adenocarcinomas (ADC, n = 20) with monoclonal antibodies to the cytoplasmic and extracellular domains of the integrin subunits alpha3 and alpha6. Integrins containing these subunits are laminin receptors. Monoclonal antibodies to beta1 and beta4 subunits, the beta1C splice variant of beta1, as well as to Ki-67, were also used. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (PCR) single-strand conformational polymorphism analysis was done to detect possible mutations in the cytodomains. All carcinomas expressed alpha3 extensively; alpha3 expression predominated (40 of 40) over alpha6 (25 of 40). In all alpha6-positive carcinomas, alpha6A was expressed, whereas alpha6B was weakly expressed only in some of them. No mutations of the intracytoplasmic domain A of alpha3 and of the A or B intracytoplasmic domains of alpha6 were shown. Notably, in normal bronchial epithelium, alpha6 colocalized with beta4, whereas in the tumors, alpha6A frequently overlapped with beta1 in a circumferential pattern; alpha6beta1 coexpression was also shown by coprecipitation experiments. Strong and extensive beta4 reactions were invariably polarized at the cell/stroma interface in SCC and ADC. An inverse correlation was found between the expression of beta1C and Ki-67. The prevalence of alpha6A in pulmonary SCC and ADC is in contrast with previous results in colonic ADC in which alpha6B prevails, and alpha6 predominates over alpha3. The absence of mutations of the cytodomains suggests that the integrin subunits of these carcinomas are potentially active. Predominance of alpha3 over alpha6 and of alpha6A over alpha6B may contribute to explain the aggressive and metastatic behavior of lung carcinomas.


Leukemia Research | 2001

Chromosome 7 monosomy and deletions in myeloproliferative diseases

Pasquale Tripputi; Barbara Cassani; Rosamaria Alfano; Daniela Graziani; Daniela Cigognini; Patrizia Doi; Monica Bignotto; Gianmarco Corneo; Guido Coggi

We studied deletion and monosomy of chromosome 7 in 150 patients with myeloproliferative diseases. We found 8/150 patients with monosomy 7 by cytogenetics and 4/150 with deletions of the long arm of chromosome 7 by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis performed with Southern and polymerase chain reaction. To overcome limitation of RFLP analysis, we restricted loss of heterozygosity study with microsatellites to 45 patients, observing deletion 7q31.1 in 7/45 patients. In all patients with molecular alterations the deletion was observed only in myeloid cells, while the monosomy was detected in both myeloid precursor and lymphocytes. This finding suggests a CD34-totipotent stem cell origin for the monosomy and a colony forming unit - granulocyte, erythrocyte, monocyte, megakaryocytes (CFU-GEMM) stem cell origin for the deletions.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2001

Surfactant Protein A Expression in Human Normal and Neoplastic Breast Epithelium

Paola Braidotti; Claudia Cigala; Daniela Graziani; Barbara Del Curto; Enrico Dessy; Guido Coggi; Silvano Bosari; Giuseppe G. Pietra

We studied the presence of surfactant protein A (Sp-A) immunoreactivity and messenger RNA in 62 normal and abnormal breast samples. Sections were immunostained with polyclonal anti-Sp-A antibody. The association between Sp-A immunoreactivity and histologic grade of 32 invasive ductal carcinomas was assessed by 3 pathologists who scored the intensity of Sp-A immunoreactivity times the percentage of tumor immunostained; individual scores were averaged, and the final scores were correlated with tumor grade, proliferative index, and expression of estrogen and progesterone receptors. Strong Sp-A immunoreactivity was present at the luminal surface of ductal epithelial cells in normal breast samples and in benign lesions; carcinomas displayed variable immunoreactivity, inversely proportional to the degree of differentiation. Sp-A messenger RNA was detected by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction in 3 of 3 normal breast samples and 9 of 9 carcinomas. The significance of Sp-A expression in breast epithelium requires further study; possibly it has a role in native host defense or epithelial differentiation.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2008

The significance of bone marrow biopsy and JAK2V617F mutation in the differential diagnosis between the "early" prepolycythemic phase of polycythemia vera and essential thrombocythemia.

Umberto Gianelli; Claudia Vener; Alessia Moro; Elisa Fermo; Paola Bianchi; Daniela Graziani; Franca Radaelli; Guido Coggi; Silvano Bosari; Giorgio Lambertenghi Deliliers; Alberto Zanella


Laboratory Investigation | 1998

Cell cycle-related gene abnormalities and product expression in esophageal carcinoma

Massimo Roncalli; Silvano Bosari; Antonio Marchetti; Fiamma Buttitta; Paola Bossi; Daniela Graziani; A. Peracchia; Luigi Bonavina; Giuseppe Viale; Guido Coggi


Pathology Research and Practice | 2005

Immunohistochemical profile and c-kit mutations in gastrointestinal stromal tumors

Solange Romagnoli; Daniela Graziani; Manuela Bramerio; Marcello Gambacorta; Piergiuseppe Colombo; Massimo Roncalli; Guido Coggi; Silvano Bosari

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Silvano Bosari

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Giuseppe Viale

European Institute of Oncology

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